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The Psychic Children Of China

http://www.psychicchildren.co.uk/1-3-ChinasSuperPsychics.html
Chinas Super Psychics
The Super Psychics of China, have been recognised and nurtured by their Government for the last 25 years.
Corresponding to the time frame of the Indigos, and recognised by Nancy Ann Tappe in her early research, the
phenomena in China has reached a critical point. Paul Dong and Thomas E Raffill, authors of Chinas Super
Psychics, state that millions of dollars have been spent researching EHF, or 'Extra Human Function' in these
children. Schools and research centres are widespread throughout the country. By 1997, 100,000 of these
Children had been recognised. No research has revealed the numbers at present, but it is clear the numbers
are increasing rapidly.
Now to get on to the incredible mind bending abilities some of these Children have. Lets start with some gems
from the book Chinas Super Psychics .One skill the children were able to develop was psychic writing, a
technique where they were asked to imagine some written words on a blank piece of paper inside a closed
pencil case. The case would be opened a short time later and on it were the words written in pencil. A girl from
Shanghai called Xiao Kiong was the first to demonstrate this ability and so in 1981, EHF researchers at Yunnan
Wenshan Teachers College in Yunnan Province selected 5 children with EHF for further training. It was soon
found that when blindfolded, these children were able to see with their ears, nose,mouth, tongue, armpits,
hands or feet.
These tests were not right just some of the time, they were flawless. American new-age magazine Omnigot
involved when the tests were set up to check there could be no cheating.
From a stack of books one was selected, then opened at random and a page was ripped out and crumpled up in
to a small ball. It was placed in the armpit of one of the children - and the child could read everyword on the
page perfectly. After many more tests Omni magazine became convinced these kids were for real. But Omni
were not the only ones present. Zhu Yiyi, editor of Shanghais Nature Magazine, a prestigious science journal
also witnessed these events.
On another occasion, a thousand people were sitting in an auditorium and were each given a rose-bud. A sixyear-old girl came on stage and with a silent wave of her hand; the thousand rosebuds would slowly open to
fully blossom into beautiful roses before the eyes of the astonished audience. Another child would take a sealed
bottle off a shelf at random and place it at the centre of a table. After a few moments the pills passed throughthe
glass bottle and settled on the table.
In many cases, the child would then take another object, such as a coin, put it on the table and it would pass
back into the sealed bottle. There are many more stories like these in Chinas Super Psychics, but lets now look
into -the Children of the Blue-Ray"
"Seeing" Without Eyes
Research continued throughout the period in the field of training psychic abilities in children. In March, 1992,
seven Hangzhou University researchers did a six-month experimental study of training schoolchildren to ''read
with the ear'' (develop visual perception through body parts other than the eye). This project, led by Tian
Weishun and Zhu Huizhong, involved 1222 students from elementary through high school, of which 623 were
boys and 599 were girls. The training method involved introducing the concept of reading with the ear and
instructing them to clear their heads and concentrate. They then checked the children's abilities in tests
proctored by their schoolteachers.
Their results were that 12.35 percent of children aged seven to thirteen had the power, but only one female
aged 17 had the power among the students from ages 14 to 18. The best age for training the ability was found
to be nine, at which age the success rate was around 20 percent.
We cite the Chinese source My Research on EHF by Prof. Tang Jianmin. He also mentions a similar
experimental study by Xu Baoyi of China's Bangbu Medical Institute. This study worked with 1388 teenagers
and found that 180 of them were able to see without their eyes. The largest number of successful subjects was
found at age 12, while the fewest were over 16.

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A report by Shao Laisheng and the well-known Zhu Yiyi (editor for China's Nature Magazine) described work in
training young adults aged 18 to 20. They found it was still possible to train them, but they had greater success
with less educated working people than with university students. They hypothesize that the university students
are busier and less able to achieve the relaxation and concentration required for successful psychic training.
One group that has continued working on research in training psychic children is the ''Human Body Informatics''
group in the electrical engineering department of Shanghai's Fudan University. In experiments from 1986 to
1993, they trained 46 children (18 male, 28 female). They reported that almost all of the children developed both
extrasensory perception and psychokinetic abilities. However, the subjects suffered from dizziness, head
throbbing and fatigue when exercising these abilities.
X-Ray Vision Studies
A popular research target in the 1990s has been see-through vision. This has a good application as a tool for
medical diagnosis. Xinjiang People's Liberation Army Hospital did 117 tests of children's abilities to perform
such medical diagnoses. In 22 cases of examining for diseases in the head, the children were correct 17 times,
partly correct four times and wrong one time. In 53 cases examining the liver, the results were: 43 correct, 5
partly correct, four wrong, and one couldn't see clearly. In 19 trials of iewing fetal position, they were correct 16
times and wrong 3 times. These results were reported in ''Preliminary Investigation of Modern Medical
Verification of EHF'' by Yang Junpeng, assistant director of the hospital.
Professor Tang Jianmin published an interesting study of the factors contributing to see-through vision. He
reviews the known results that the power is prevalent more in females than in males, more in youths than
adults, more in rural areas than in cities, more among American children than Chinese children, and more
among Chinese adults than American adults. He hypothesizes that the development of see-through vision is
affected by the same factors that affect ordinary vision: relaxation, and spending less time on activities that
focus the vision strongly like reading, watching television, driving, and doing stressful work. This theory could
explain some of the differences observed. For example, children in China spend more time reading and
studying than children in America, so this could affect both their vision and their see-through vision.
http://www.spiritofmaat.com/archive/oct1/pdong.htm
Chinese Government Shifts Stance
As the 1990s drew to a close, psychic research became a center of controversy, as many masters of chi gong
meditation promoted their practices as a path to mysterious spiritual powers. The Chinese government took a
negative view of some of these activities, especially those that rejected the use of conventional medicine. In
1999, the Chinese government banned one of these chi gong practices, Falun Gong, and issued an arrest
warrant for its leader, Li Hongzhi, who has been living in New York. Many newspaper and magazine articles in
China attacked their mysterious beliefs as superstition. However, psychic research in a scientific framework has
continued to receive the support of the Chinese government. Paul Dong discusses this issue in our forthcoming
book The Allure of Falun Gong (Welcome Rain Publishers). It is noteworthy that in the 1980s, many highranking Chinese government officials supported psychic research, but today most of these have been replaced
by a new generation of eaders who have shown that either they aren't familiar with the research or they don't
believe in it. Thus, the future of psychic research in China is uncertain, although the work continues today in
many institutes in the country.

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